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History

History - Harlow Green

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Page 1: History - Harlow Green

History

Page 2: History - Harlow Green

Key Question

How does pop music reflect British culture?

WILF:

1.) Research different music styles.

2.) Find out some key bands/singers.

3.) Show how they influenced/reflected culture.

Page 3: History - Harlow Green

Discuss

• Who is your favourite singer/band?

• Who are your parents’ favourite singers/bands?

• Who are your grandparents’ favourite singers/bands?

Page 4: History - Harlow Green

Research

• https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zbw7pv4/articles/zrrnpg8

• Use the website above, and any others, to find out and listen to music from famous bands and artists since 1950.

Page 5: History - Harlow Green

Jazz• Jazz was born in African American communities in

America during the late 1800s and early 1900s.

• Improvisation is a very important part of jazz (playing

what you feel in that moment).

• There are many different jazz styles, including

ragtime, swing, cool jazz and be-bop.

• Instruments used in jazz could include trumpets,

piano, trombones and the four types of saxophone –

soprano, alto, tenor and baritone.

• Louis Armstrong was a famous jazz musician who

had a growly voice and could play the trumpet.

Page 6: History - Harlow Green

• Miles Davis was an American composer, jazz trumpet player and band leader who played a major part in introducing new styles of jazz. He introduced the electric piano and electric bass into his band, playing in a brand new style which mixed jazzwith rock.

• In the 1970s, jazz was influenced by Latin jazz, mixing rhythms from Latin and African countries. Instruments such as the güiro and claves were introduced.

• Jazz became less popular in the 1980s, however there are many jazz musicians still around today, including Jamie Cullum.

Jazz

Page 7: History - Harlow Green

• 1960s soul music is a style of African American

music.

• It was influenced by gospel singing, had lyrical

melodies, a strong rhythm and large horn sections

including saxophones, trombones and trumpets.

• Popular performers included The Four Tops and Otis

Redding.

Soul

Page 8: History - Harlow Green

• Rock ‘n’ roll is a popular music style which came from America during the late 1940s and early 1950s.

• It developed out of other African American musical styles, such as boogie woogie, blues, country music and gospel music.

• In the early 1940s, the saxophone or piano were often the lead instrument but this was replaced with the guitar in the 50s.

• The classic rock and roll sound is created with one or two electric guitars, an electric bass guitar, a string bass and drums.

• A very popular rock ‘n’ roll hit was ‘Rock Around The Clock’ by Bill Haley & His Comets.

Rock ‘n’ Roll

Page 9: History - Harlow Green

• Another famous musician from this era was Elvis

Presley who was known by many as the King of

Rock and Roll. He had many hits such as

‘Heartbreak Hotel’ and ‘Blue Suede Shoes’.

• Elvis recorded 40 top 10 songs and had 18 number

one hits.

Rock ‘n’ Roll

Page 10: History - Harlow Green

• The 60s was the beginnings of popular music or ‘pop’

music.

• The rock and roll age of Elvis and Bill Haley & His

Comets was taken over by popular music groups

such as The Monkees and The Beatles.

• Both bands achieved fame in the UK and America.

• The Beatles, (otherwise known as The Fab Four)

were one of the most famous bands in the history of

pop music. The members were: Paul McCartney,

John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison.

• They were from Liverpool and wrote their own songs

and music.

Popular (Pop)

Page 11: History - Harlow Green

• They recorded over 200 songs in the 1960s and

some famous hits include ‘A Hard Day’s Night’,

‘Yesterday’, ‘Help!’ and ‘Hey Jude’.

• They became so popular with fans that their success

and popularity became known as ‘Beatlemania’.

Popular (Pop)

Page 12: History - Harlow Green

• Funk music was popular in the late 1960s and 1970s

with performers such as James Brown and Kool &

The Gang.

• Funk began when African American musicians

created music which didn’t focus on melody or

harmony but had a strong rhythmic groove.

• Typical ‘funk’ instruments consist of the electric

guitar, electric bass and drums.

• Funk was influenced by soul music and would

sometimes include a horn section of saxophones

and/or trumpets.

Funk

Page 13: History - Harlow Green

• A very popular musical style of the 1970s.

• Disco was music you could really boogie on down to

on the dance floor.

• Well known performers include ABBA, The Bee Gees

and Chic.

• Famous hits of this decade include ‘Dancing Queen’

(ABBA) and ‘Stayin’ Alive’ (The Bee Gees).

Disco

Page 14: History - Harlow Green

• Hip hop began in America in the 1970s.

• This musical style began with block parties in New York, where music was brought outside.

• It includes programmed beats, rapping, samples and DJing. A sample is a recorded sound.

• The rapping element comes from Jamaica - a cross between rhythmic chanting and talking.

• DJs make the instrumental sections longer, otherwise known as breaks, then rapping takes place over the breaks and break dancers usually perform.

• DJ Kool Herc is known as the ‘Father of Hip Hop’.

Hip Hop

Page 15: History - Harlow Green

• Hip Hop has become increasingly popular since the

1970s and is still a style of music loved by people all

over the world today.

Hip Hop

Page 16: History - Harlow Green

• Indie music or ‘indie pop’ became popular in the 1980s.

• Indie music stands for ‘independent music’ which means that the music doesn’t fit into one style.

• Popular UK bands of the time included The Smiths, made up of Morrissey (singer), Johnny Marr (guitarist), Andy Rourke (bassist) and Mike Joyce (drummer).

• Many music critics believe that they were the voice of the 80s and the most influential British guitar group of that decade.

• Bands of the 90s and 00s, such as Blur, and more recently Bastille, are put into the category of ‘indie rock’- a type of alternative rock.

Indie

Page 17: History - Harlow Green

• R 'n' B began in America during the late 1980s with

artists such as Whitney Houston and Janet Jackson

(the sister of Michael Jackson).

• Contemporary R ‘n’ B shouldn’t be confused with

earlier R&B (rhythm and blues), African American

music which began in the 1940’s combining jazz and

blues.

• R ‘n’ B music mixes elements of hip-hop and soul.

• Popular R 'n' B artists of the 90’s included Eternal.

• Today, Rihanna is a popular R ‘n’ B artist.

Contemporary R ‘n’ B

Page 18: History - Harlow Green

• Choose 2 or 3 famous bands from different eras.

• You need to decide how you are going to set your work out – it might be in the style of a Top Trump card; you could do it as a power point presentation; or you could do it as an information text.

• Design your own CD (or LP) cover for one of their albums.

• Find out some key details about them.

• Try to show why they have had such an influence and how they impacted upon society.

Page 19: History - Harlow Green

The BeatlesThe Beatles were a band from Liverpool.They became so popular it was known as ‘Beatlemania.’The Beatles wrote 229 songs altogether.John Lennon, the lead singer, was shot.

They embodied what the "swinging sixties" were all about. It was one of the loudest and audacious decades in forms of art, music, culture, and news and the Beatles were smack dab in the middle of it. They absorbed everything around them and set off in their own direction: one that would define a generation. They changed the lifestyle of youths across the nation—something that history proves does not happen overnight. The Beatles changed so much: the image of Britain, music, culture, fashion, attitudes to class. They made Britain feel a better place and more dynamic, 'swinging' and 'cool' to people across the world.